Goldman started the past two seasons at FSU and was considered a first-round talent by some draft pundits, although concerns about his toughness likely hurt his draft stock.

A former five-star prospect out of Washington, D.C., Goldman’s production (62 tackles, 12 tackles for loss six sacks in 36 games) never quite matched his lofty billing. He did, however, have to tantalize NFL teams with his physical traits and upside. When motivated, like in his performance against Clemson in 2014, Goldman can be outright dominant. The 6-foot-4, 320-pound mammoth of a man is athletic enough to play defensive end in a 3-4 scheme but is strong enough to play closer to the center in a 4-3 scheme.

Goldman was an Associated Press All-American last season and opted to capitalize on by far his best season – 35 tackles, four sacks, eight tackles for loss – by forgoing his senior year and declaring for the NFL draft.